| Newmedia on Sun, 5 Mar 2000 06:24:34 +0100 (CET) |
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| Re: <nettime> NOTHING WORSE |
Josephine:
Thanks one again for . . . the help with Zizek. As you know, I've found
Zizek to be one of the more interesting voices on nettime (or elsewhere of
late) and I regret that I didn't succeed in getting more of his work
translated into English when that project first was broached as I was
strolling down the streets of Ljubljana.
However, I'm not at all sure that what Zizek means by the "symbolic order" --
particularly as you discuss this as something that is (nearly?) alive and can
take on "human" qualities, such as "tart-ness" -- isn't closely related to
what I mean by the "electric media environment."
Perhaps it would be useful to compare and contrast these phrases at some
point? You might also recall that I enjoy playing with words, exploring
their etymologies, mixing-up specialist jargons and flipping over ossified
meme-isms. Maybe some more of that would be helpful under the circumstances?
(Afterall, language is the UR-medium and therefore the UR-message.)
The widely noted process (on nettime and everywhere else thoughtful people
congregate) of losing our capacity to ACT . . . in-this-world, as artists, as
thinkers, as humans, is intimately correlated with the rise of electricity in
19th century Europe, it would seem.
Pre-electricity, as I "read" things, this loss really wasn't a concern of any
great magnitude. People invented, created, thought, acted without much
concern that they would be ignored, brushed aside, treated as wallpaper,
consumed as just more media "content." More spectacle. More virtuality.
More entertainment. More phatic communion.
Pre-electricity . . . ideas mattered, paintings mattered, gestures mattered .
. . people mattered.
While the notion that by adopting inventions -- let's just say "media" -- as
extentions to our human faculties that we undergo a correlative
"externalization" and thus an "amputation" of those same faculties is plain
enough, what could it have been -- other than electricity -- which allowed us
to extend our own nervous systems? Thus "externalizing" and "amputating" our
nerves from our "selves"?
At some point, you might imagine, if you "amputate" enough of your nervous
system, you could rightly wonder if you are still human. Indeed, if you
might wonder if "you" still exist . . . as "you." At some point in this
process, doesn't "humanity" itself potentially "dis-appear"? Could this have
already happened?
Isn't this what Nietzsche (and thus everyone since Nietzsche) was noticing?
The "dis-appearance" of the "Individual"?
That "externalized" and "amputated" nervous system -- coming "alive" and
replacing "human" agency with its own "prerogative" -- is simply what I mean
by our "electric media environment." (And, could that "prerogative" include
what McLuhan refers to as a "ideological machine"?)
How does this (perhaps more historic and dynamic) description differ from
Zizek's various treatments of his "symbolic order"? Are we talking about
variants of the same phenomena?
As we lost more and more of our "selves" to this "environment" and, along
with it, our capacity to ACT, you might imagine that there would be an
increased inclination to try to compensate for this loss by trying to "buy"
some of it back. Perhaps one could "buy" some "magic" or something that
would give us some of the "power" that had been so cruelly "amputated" by
"electric media."
Thus, the potential temptation to "sell" our "mortal souls" to gain some
capacity to leverage the world once again would seen quite natural. It
strikes me as no accident that the rise of both "ideology" and of "occultism"
from, say, 1850 on, co-incided with the rise of the "electric media
environment." (Nor it is an accident, that the "ideologues" and the
"occultists" were often the same people. Annie Besant, for instance. Or,
Hitler.)
So, with the rise of the "electric media environment," the trials of "Faust"
move from the realm of "myth" towrds an everyday occurance. In order to ACT,
under "electric" conditions where one is in-exorably losing the capacity to
ACT, one finds oneself "selling" what is most precious to "buy" back that
lost "power." ("Tarts", anyone?)
Without much fear regarding the results, I attempted to explore the
implications of an association between this "Faustian" SELLING-OUT of your
deepest critical faculties with adopting the posture of "ACTIVISM" at a forum
last night with Langdon Winner. And, all this was even happening at the NY
Open Center, too -- Manhattan's center of things newly "occult." It would be
safe to say that he wasn't amused. <g>
Perhaps you are?
Best,
Mark Stahlman
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